White Tea & Jasmine Incense, 100g
White tea and jasmine have been combined in Chinese tea culture for centuries, for a reason that has never needed explanation. The jasmine opens the space. The white tea holds it clean.
The combination of white tea and jasmine is not accidental. These two fragrances have been paired deliberately for a specific reason: they support each other in a way that neither achieves alone.
White tea is for the lightness that makes everything more transparent. White tea's fragrance is delicate — fresher and less oxidized than green or oolong, with a subtle, slightly woody quality that does not impose. In incense form, it provides a clean base that clears the air without adding weight. The middle and finish of the burn bring the tea's clarity to the foreground: grounding the floral, keeping the room feeling open rather than sweet.
Jasmine is for the floral that the white tea elevates. Jasmine alone can be heavy. In combination with white tea's lightness, the jasmine opens cleanly — its sweetness more measured, its projection more contained. The white tea does not dilute the jasmine. It clarifies it. The result is a floral incense that remains fresh rather than cloying across the full burn.
100g at 21 cm is for those who burn with intention. At this weight and length, this is incense for regular practice. The sticks burn long and even. The two-material composition gives each burn more to develop through — the jasmine leading, the tea clarifying, both arriving at a finish that is cleaner than either would reach alone.
For those who want their room to smell like a decision, not an afterthought.
Materials: White tea and jasmine incense blend · 21 cm sticks · 100g
Keep away from flammable materials. Use in a well-ventilated space. Store in a cool, dry place.
Shipping
We ship worldwide. Orders are carefully packaged to protect fragrance and material integrity during transit.
Returns & Exchanges
We accept returns within 30 days of delivery for unused items in original condition.
About Agarwood
Agarwood forms when an aquilaria tree responds to injury by producing a dense, resin-saturated heartwood. The rarer the resin, the deeper the fragrance.
Kynam is the highest grade — soft, oily, complex. Its scent shifts from sweet to floral to woody throughout the day.